Influenza Virus Mashup

Influenza Virus Mashup

Archive for May, 2010

[Avian Flu Diary] NPI’s and Influenza

Posted by Automator On May - 1 - 2010

(Sat, 01 May 2010 13:27:00 +0000)

 

 

# 4539

 

 

NPIs are Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions – ways to reduce the spread of a disease - and have been a frequent topic in this blog over the years.   

 

NPI’s can be as simple as hand hygiene, covering your coughs, and avoiding crowds, or can involve the use of personal protective barriers like N95 or surgical masks, latex or vinyl gloves, and eye protection.

 

School closures, public education, staying home when sick, and engineered barriers to avoid exposure are also examples of NPIs.

 

And the evidence to date is these steps, if widely implemented, can make a real difference in the spread of an epidemic like Influenza.

Pharmaceutical solutions, most notably vaccines, take months to develop and deploy.  The next pandemic flu to erupt may not be nearly as mild as the 2009 strain, and may hit far more suddenly. 

 

The goal, in those early months before a vaccine becomes available, is to reduce the spread of the virus as much as possible.  In this way, the burden on health care facilities, and toll of absenteeism and on the lives of those effected can be reduced.

 

image

 

 

NPI’s have been described as being like slices of Swiss cheese, with each containing large holes through which the virus can pass, but when stacked on top of each other, can provide an effective barrier.

 

While it is known that these measures can help reduce influenza transmission, there are many open questions regarding their relative merits, cost effectiveness, and optimum combination.  

 

Unknown too, is exactly how influenza is transmitted.   

Large droplet spread, via coughing and sneezing, is assumed to be the primary mode of transmission, but the exact role of fomites (contaminated inanimate objects we may touch), and the role of fine aerosolized particles are only beginning to be understood.

 

Allison E. Aiello of the University of Michigan is one of the researchers that has been looking for answers to these questions, and I’ve featured her team’s work a number of times.

 

Michigan NPI Study: A Closer Look
Study: Effectiveness of NPIs Against ILI’s
Study: NPI’s Can Help Prevent Spread Of Flu-Like Illnesses

 

Aiello’s team has recently published their findings in the May issue of the American Journal of Infection Control.   The abstract is available, but it requires a subscription to access the main article.

 

Luckily we’ve a pretty good summary available from MedPage Today. First the abstract, then the link to the MedPage article.

 

Research findings from nonpharmaceutical intervention studies for pandemic influenza and current gaps in the research

Allison E. Aiello, et al.

AJIC: American Journal of Infection Control - May 2010 (Vol. 38, Issue 4, Pages 251-258, DOI: 10.1016/j.ajic.2009.12.007)

In June 2006, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a request for applications to identify, improve, and evaluate the effectiveness of nonpharmaceutical interventions (NPIs)—strategies other than vaccines and antiviral medications—to mitigate the spread of pandemic influenza within communities and across international borders (RFA-CI06-010).

These studies have provided major contributions to seasonal and pandemic influenza knowledge. Nonetheless, key concerns were identified related to the acceptability and protective efficacy of NPIs. Large-scale intervention studies conducted over multiple influenza epidemics, as well as smaller studies in controlled laboratory settings, are needed to address the gaps in the research on transmission and mitigation of influenza in the community setting. The current novel influenza A (H1N1) pandemic underscores the importance of influenza research.

 

 

 

Non-Drug Approach Can Slow Spread of Pandemic Flu

By Michael Smith, North American Correspondent, MedPage Today

Published: April 30, 2010

Reviewed by Dori F. Zaleznik, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston and
Dorothy Caputo, MA, RN, BC-ADM, CDE, Nurse Planner
 

Nonpharmaceutical interventions, such as handwashing campaigns, can have a significant impact on the spread of the pandemic H1N1 flu, researchers said.

 

But an analysis of 11 CDC-supported studies reveals key gaps in the research, according to Allison Aiello, PhD, of the University of Michigan Ann Arbor, and colleagues.

 

The researchers, writing in the May issue of the American Journal of Infection Control, called for large intervention studies, conducted over multiple flu seasons, to assess the impacts of such things as handwashing, cough etiquette, and mask wearing.

 

Research is also needed into the psychosocial and cultural barriers that make some groups reluctant to accept such measures, Aiello and colleagues said, as well as lab studies to pin down how the flu is transmitted.

(Continue . . .)

Via Ida at Bird Flu Information Corner, a report from Riau TerkiniSungaiapit, Riau ::: Deceased girl tests positive H5N1, three others under intensive care. Excerpt:

A four-year-old girl, Joice Evelyn, resident of Jalan Sidomulyo, Kelurahan Padangbulan, Kecamatan Senapelan, Kota Pekanbaru has been confirmed to have died of bird flu (H5N1) virus. 

“We have received the laboratory result of Joice Evelyn and it was evidently positive bird flu,” said Head of Bird Flu Control Team of Arifin Achmad hospital, dr Azizman Saad. 

Meanwhile, Arifin Achmad hospital is currently treating three other bird flu suspect patients, a woman, Siti Fatimah (40) and her daughter, Anggi (14), and their neighbor, Diva Amanadasari (8). They are resided in Sungai Apit Kabupaten Siak.

[Avian Flu Diary] CIDRAP Lessons Learned: PT III

Posted by Automator On May - 1 - 2010

(Sat, 01 May 2010 11:57:00 +0000)

 

# 4538

 

 

 

CIDRAP (Center For Infectious Disease Research & Policy) presents the third in a series of Lessons Learned reports – written this time by Lisa Schnirring – focusing on the pandemic vaccination campaign.

 

I blogged on the first two reports at:

 

CIDRAP: H1N1 Lessons Learned
CIDRAP’s Lessons Learned: Pt II

 

 

As always with a CIDRAP report, this is well worth following the link and reading in its entirety.

 

 

 

H1N1 LESSONS LEARNED
Vaccination campaign weathered rough road, paid dividends

Lisa Schnirring * Staff Writer

This is the third in a series of reports marking the first anniversary of novel H1N1 pandemic influenza. The first and second articles appeared on Apr 23 and Apr 26.

 

Apr 30, 2010 (CIDRAP News) – As the biggest public health initiative in the history of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the H1N1 pandemic vaccination campaign encountered stiff headwinds with scarce supplies and complex messaging but ended up reaching about a quarter of the US population and, some say, smoothing the path for future immunization efforts.

 

About a month after the pandemic flu virus emerged, federal officials ordered vaccines from five different companies at a price tag of $650 million, with $287million more for adjuvants that could be needed if the virus turned out to be severe or if vaccine potency was lower than expected.

(Continue . . . )

[Crof's H5N1] CIDRAP : H1N1 lessons learned (III)

Posted by Automator On May - 1 - 2010

Via CIDRAP, Lisa Schnirring write the third in an important series: H1N1 LESSONS LEARNED: Vaccination campaign weathered rough road, paid dividends. Excerpt:

As the biggest public health initiative in the history of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the H1N1 pandemic vaccination campaign encountered stiff headwinds with scarce supplies and complex messaging but ended up reaching about a quarter of the US population and, some say, smoothing the path for future immunization efforts. 

About a month after the pandemic flu virus emerged, federal officials ordered vaccines from five different companies at a price tag of $650 million, with $287 million more for adjuvants that could be needed if the virus turned out to be severe or if vaccine potency was lower than expected. 

While manufacturers struggled with a low-yielding seed strain, public health experts were anxious about the next daunting step: getting the vaccine into people’s arms. 

Their task was to launch the first mass vaccination campaign since the much-maligned swine flu vaccine of 1976, against steady undercurrents of antivaccine sentiment and general mistrust of government.

[Flu Wiki Forum] News Reports for May 1, 2010

Posted by Automator On May - 1 - 2010

(Sat, 01 May 2010 03:18:23 GMT)

Reminder: Please do not post whole articles, just snippets and links. Thanks!!

Australia

?  The swine flu theory behind bad reactions to flu vaccine (Link)

China

?  Hong Kong: Critical case of human swine influenza at Pamela Youde Nethersole Hospital (Link)

Malaysia

?  Current Situation of Influenza A (H1N1) as of May 1, 2010 (translated) (Link)

United States

?  US: CIDRAP - High dose flu vaccine for elderly coming this year (Link)

?  CDC: Licensure of a High-Dose Inactivated Influenza Vaccine for Persons Aged 65 Years (Fluzone High-Dose) and Guidance for Use — United States, 2010 (Link)

?  TX: Teen may need heart transplant due to H1N1 (Link)

Vietnam

?  CIDRAP: More than 6,000 birds killed in Vietnam’s latest H5N1 outbreaks (Link)

Research

?  CIDRAP: Adjuvanted H5N1 vaccine looks good in early clinical trial (Link)

Commentary

?  Anderson Cooper: CNN AC360? Web Exclusive: All risks are not created equal (Link)



?  H (Link)

News for April 30, 2010 is here.


Thanks to all of the newshounds!
Special thanks to the newshound volunteers who translate international stories - thanks for keeping us all informed!

Other useful links:

CDC A(H1N1) Site

WHO A(H1N1) Site

WHO H5N1 human case totals, last updated April 21, 2010
Charts and Graphs on H5N1 from WHO
Google Flu Trends (U.S.)
CDC Weekly Influenza Summary
Map of seasonal influenza in the U.S.
CIDPC (Canada) Weekly FluWatch
European CDC Influenza News
UK RCGP Weekly Data on Communicable and Respiratory Diseases
Flu Wiki Main Page

Apr 27, 2010 (CIDRAP News) – In the latest developments surrounding suspected adverse reactions to the seasonal flu vaccine in Australian children, an autopsy revealed no clear link to immunization in the death of a 2-year-old, and vaccine maker CSL said it has found no evidence of a bad batch connected to cases reported so far. The adverse events that the country’s health officials are investigating involve CSL’s seasonal flu vaccine, which covers the pandemic H1N1 virus. So far most of the reports are concentrated in West Australia state, which unlike other states offers free seasonal flu vaccine for children under age 5.

West Australian officials have received 250 reports of possible adverse reactions, the Australian Associated Press (AAP) reported today. Queensland has also received some adverse-event reports and is investigating the death of a 2-year-old Brisbane girl who died about 12 hours after receiving the vaccine. The events prompted Australian health officials on Apr 23 to ask health providers to stop giving children under age 5 the vaccine while it investigated fever and convulsions in some children who had received it. At the same time CSL said it stopped shipping the pediatric version of its Fluvax vaccine while it and health authorities investigate the events.

Dr Jeanette Young, Queensland’s chief medical officer, said today that the initial autopsy on the Brisbane child revealed no evidence that her death was linked to the seasonal flu shot, but further tests are needed, the Brisbane Times reported today. “It’s too early at this stage to say that the vaccine caused this child’s death or indeed what did cause this child’s death,” she said. “But at this stage there’s nothing jumping out and saying this child died as a result of receiving the vaccine.” Meanwhile, CSL, which makes flu vaccine for Australia but is not the country’s sole provider, said today that a check of vaccine batch numbers on the adverse-event reports does not indicate that a single batch is responsible for the suspected reactions, the AAP reported today. CSL told the AAP that it was continuing to work with regulators and West Australian health officials to investigate the adverse-reaction reports.

 Continued:

http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidrap/content/influenza/swineflu/news/apr2710australia.html

Australia
• CIDRAP: Australia widens probe into flu-vaccine events (Link) Bloomberg article (Link)

Australia
• Flu jab still the safer option for children (Link)

Bangladesh
• 19 poultry markets up for upgrade to avert bird flu risk (Link)
• Bangladesh Reports 12 Outbreaks of Bird Flu (Link)

Canada
• British Columbia: Nine people dead at B.C. hospital since ‘influenza-like’ outbreak began (Link)
• Mystery outbreak leaves 9 dead (Link)

Cambodia
• More than 1,000 birds killed by H5N1 virus (Link)

Cuba
• H1N1 Virus Keeps Striking Cuba (Link)

India
• Summer’s first swine flu case in Andhra (Link)

• H1N1 Raises Ugly Head Again – Two Lose Lives (Link)

Indonesia
Bird Flu Case in Spreads Starting Apit River (Link)
• Partnership Reduces the Risk of Bird Flu (US Embassy press release) (Link)

• Joice Positive , Arifin Achmad Hospital Patients Hospitalized Three suspect(ed of) bird flu (Link)
• Three Suspected Bird Flu Sufferers in Pekanbaru hospitalized (Link)
• Patient Suspect Bird Flu Parents Try Fleeing The Department Of Internal Medicine (Link)

Malaysia
• H1N1 – 29 new cases reported (Link)

• 2 heart patients add to death toll (Link)
• Current Situation of Influenza A (H1N1) as of 30 April 2010 (translated) (Link)
• Woman is latest H1N1 victim (Link)

• Current Situation of Influenza A (H1N1) as of 29 April 2010 (Link) Ministry of Health Report (Link)

Thailand
• BMA hopes to examine H1N1 Influenza at Ratchaprasong (Link)

Uganda
• ProMed: Undiagnosed Fatalities – Uganda (Bugiri), Meningitis Suspected, Request For Information (Link)

United States
• IN: Indiana health department shuts down swine flu line (Link)

• HHS has a new venture: Open Government Plan (Link)

Vietnam
• Outbreak under control influenza A/H5N1 (translated) (Link)
• Streptococcus alarm from pig to human transmission – High risk of spread of H5N1 from Cambodia to Vietnam (translated) (Link)
• Hot sun, the North inspired many diseases (Link)

Research
• A clamp for emerging flu viruses (Link)

General
• Much slower travel couldn’t contain influenza even in 1889 (Link)
• WHO: Pandemic (H1N1) 2009 – update 98 (Link)

 

[Avian Flu Diary] Media: Indonesian Bird Flu Fatality

Posted by Automator On May - 1 - 2010

(Fri, 30 Apr 2010 19:22:00 +0000)

 

 

 

# 4537

 

Indonesian media is reporting the 4 year-old girl who died on Wednesday in the flu isolation unit of Arifin Achmad hospital in Pekan Baru, Indonesia has tested positive for the H5N1 virus.  

 

Meanwhile, three others from the same region remain hospitalized with suspected H5H1 infection.  A 40 year-old mother, her 14-year-old child, and an 8-year-old neighbor. 

 

Their conditions are reported as improving.  

 

 

This machine translation is of an original article from riauterkini.com news.

 

Friday, 30 April 2010 19:40

Positive Joice, Arifin Achmad Hospital Patients Hospitalized third suspect bird flu


 Joice toddlers tested positive Efeline died from bird flu. Sementa currently three residents in the provincial hospital Siak Arifin Achmad for allegedly infected by H5N1 virus.

Riauterkini-Pekanbaru-suspect case of bird flu, Arifin Achmad Hospital has treated this weekend hikes.  After a toddler, child Sidomulyo resident Street, Padang Keluruhan headdress, District Senapelan, named Joice Efeline Pekanbaru City died Wednesday (28/4/10) and ascertained from the virus or the H5N1 strain of avian enfluenza, now there were three patients who origin in Siak Regency should be treated in isolation space suspect bird flu patients.

 

To Joyce Efeline we can and certainly a positive laboratory result of bird flu,” said Chairman of the Bird Flu Prevention Team Arifin Achmad Pekanbaru Hospital Saad Azizman to riauterkini in Pekanbaru, on Friday (30/4/10).

 

While about three patients Siak origin who is now hospitalized in isolation room is a mother named Siti Fatimah (40) and his son, Anggi (14) and neighbor Diva Amandasari (8).

All three residents Apit River, Siak.

All three enter simultaneously at dawn earlier. Initially treated in the emergency room (ER), but because his body temperature reached 38 degrees Celsius, and then referred to were isolated in a special room patients suspect bird flu.

“Now all three conditions began to improve.  His temperature began to decrease and his lung condition is stable, “explained Azizman .***( mad)